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5 Tasks to do today for a Vegetable Garden tomorrow

5 Tasks to do today for a Vegetable Garden tomorrow

By Abbagail at Sage & Shepherd Ranch 

What to do Today 
 
1. Make a List of Favourites 

What are your favourite vegetables to eat? What do you eat the most of on a regular basis? There is no point in planting something if you never eat it and hate it! The easiest to grow veggies are lettuces/spinach, cucumber, beans/peas, tomatoes, and kale/swiss chard.  
 
 
2. Find the best spot for your garden 

Take a minute and find the sunniest spot, and the closest spot to your house (the closer it is, the more often you’ll want to go out there). Pick your place and then decide whether or not you will build a raised bed, or plant in the ground. Either is great, just depends on your budget and available resources. 
 

 
3. Figure out how much soil you need 

As a rule of thumb, generally its 30L per 1 cubic foot. So, if you have a 4’ x 4’ raised garden bed that’s 12” high, you’d need 15 bags of soil. If you have in-ground beds, I would aim to have at least 4-6” of fresh soil before planting. Depending on the size of your garden you can always find a bulk supplier that delivers full cubic yards. 
 
4. Make some purchases 

Grab that list of favourite veggies and the quantity of soil you need and go out and grab it all (or order online)! Find a seed company and purchase the seeds of your favourite vegetables, or if it’s already later in the season, buy seedlings from a nursery. For soil, I would do a ½ and ½ mix of triple mix and compost. Also if you are building raised beds, be sure to grab timber too.  
 
5. Make a quick garden plan 

This part might seem daunting, but if you are planting the basic, easy to grow veggies, like listed above, it will be super easy! Following the spacing on the back of the seed pack is a good start, but I also like the square foot garden method. Simply put, in each square foot you plant a different veggie and a particular quantity according to that veggie. 
 
For example, tomato and cucumber take up two square feet. For kale/swiss chard and beans/peas you can plant 1-2 plants per square foot depending on variety, and for the lettuces and spinach, you can plant 4 plants per 1 square foot. So, for that 4’ x 4’ raised bed, I could plant 2 tomato plants, 2 cucumber plants, 1-2 kale plants, 1-2 swiss chard plant, 1-2 bean plants, 1-2 pea plants, 8 spinach plants, and 8 lettuce plants. Pretty great, right? 
 
 
What to do Tomorrow 

Once you have completed the list above, it’s time for the fun stuff! Commit an hour to build your raised garden bed or prep your in-ground bed. After that is complete, fill everything up with soil, put the triple mix down first and then the compost. Then grab that plan you made yesterday, lay all your vegetables out, and plant those babies! 
 
Starting a garden is much easier than you think, and can be maintained for 5-10 minutes a day. I’d love to answer any questions you have below in the comments!  
 
Thanks, 

Abbagail 

About Sage & Shepherd Ranch 

S&S Ranch is run by husband and wife, Abbagail & Mackenzie. We started with a few chickens for ourselves, and then we fell in love with the ability to control where our food comes from and the act of farming itself. We raise our animals in a regenerative manner which means we sequester carbon, build topsoil, rotationally graze animals holistically and mimic nature as much as possible.  

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